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When business
people are looking for new ideas and fresh motivation, they often
go by the book.
New business-related titles appear constantly, and a few books
have become long-term success stories. Popular themes and terms
become part of the language of business.
People who are familiar with "Seven Habits of Highly Effective
People," for example, aren't confused if they hear clients or colleagues
talking about "sharpening the saw."
Kevin Banning, head of the marketing department at Auburn University
Montgomery (Ala.), believes that many people who read mass-market
business books are looking for nuggets -- practical information
that may be tucked into a book that otherwise doesn't have much
that's new.
"You're always looking for someone with a good idea," Banning said.
"'Swim with the Sharks without Being Eaten Alive' contained a couple
of very practical things. 'How to Win Friends and Influence People'
I read early on and really thought it was great. At the end of every
chapter there was a list of very practical nuggets."
Banning mostly reads business books that are specific to his field
-- marketing -- and spends less time with the popular business titles.
"In Search of Excellence: Lessons From America's Best-Run Companies"
(written by Tom Peters and Robert Waterman in 1988) purported to
show what made several companies successful.
"It didn't hold up," Banning said. "A decade later, those companies
were just average, with the exception of GE."
Steve Cagle, store manager at Barnes & Noble Booksellers in Montgomery,
Ala., sees increased interest in business books at the end of each
year, as people set goals for their personal finances, and another
surge of interest around tax time.
"'The Automatic Millionaire' is real popular right now," he said.
As a manager, which book has he found beneficial?
"'Who Moved My Cheese?' is a great, short story. You can apply
these principles in every situation," Cagle said. "Every company
is always going through changes."
Candace Myers, assistant manager at a Montgomery B. Dalton Bookseller,
said certain titles never lose popularity, especially "The One Minute
Manager," "Who Moved My Cheese?" "Good to Great" and "Seven Habits
of Highly Effective People."
"We sell these over and over and over again," Myers said.
Other popular books mentioned by Banning, Cagle and Myers include:
*"Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done" by Ram Charan
and Larry Bossidy, 2002.
*"Who Says Elephants Can't Dance: Leading a Great Enterprise through
Dramatic Change" by Louis V. Gerstner, 2003. The book looks at the
turnaround at IBM.
*"The Profit Zone: How Strategic Business Design Will Lead You
to Tomorrow's Profits" by Adrian Slywotzky, 2002. "It says to stop
focusing on market share and remember you're supposed to be making
money. It's obvious, yet it needed to be restated," Banning said.
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